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Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi

Objectives The objective is to assess the overall quality of life (QoL) in patients who had undergone renal transplant within the last three years and correlate this index with various demographic variables such as age, gender, marital status, and education level and to correlate the QoL score calcu...

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Autores principales: Mallick, Naafiah K, Hassan, Amna, Bhatti, Rai Salaar Sultan, Rafique, Daneyal, Jaffery, Ailiya R, Sharif, Imtenan, Zameer, Noor U, Mustafa, Hamayun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9883980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36721569
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.33083
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author Mallick, Naafiah K
Hassan, Amna
Bhatti, Rai Salaar Sultan
Rafique, Daneyal
Jaffery, Ailiya R
Sharif, Imtenan
Zameer, Noor U
Mustafa, Hamayun
author_facet Mallick, Naafiah K
Hassan, Amna
Bhatti, Rai Salaar Sultan
Rafique, Daneyal
Jaffery, Ailiya R
Sharif, Imtenan
Zameer, Noor U
Mustafa, Hamayun
author_sort Mallick, Naafiah K
collection PubMed
description Objectives The objective is to assess the overall quality of life (QoL) in patients who had undergone renal transplant within the last three years and correlate this index with various demographic variables such as age, gender, marital status, and education level and to correlate the QoL score calculated vs. the health status perceived by the patients themselves Materials and methods This was an analytical cross-sectional study, carried out over a period of five months. A total of 123 patients were targeted among which data from 79 patients were gathered including all the patients that underwent kidney transplantation in the past three years at a renal transplant center in CMH, Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Non- Probability convenience sampling was used, and data were collected using the WHOQOL-BREF tool that contained 25 questions targeted to four domains (physical, psychological, social, and environmental). The Questionnaire was administered over the phone with proper consent taken beforehand. Data were analyzed using Excel and SPSS version 23. Results A total of 79 patients were administered the questionnaire with the mean age of our study population being 35±11 years out of which 84.5% were male and 15.5% were female. Patients received the kidney from relative donors (98.4%) with the highest percentage being sister donors (30.9%). The majority of patients reported from Punjab (54.4%), with the rest from far-flung rural areas. An estimated 62.5% of the patients presented with other systemic/psychological disorders such as DM+, IHD, HTN, Hepatitis C, depression, etc. The mean global score of these patients was 79.21 which can be broken down into four domains, physical domain 80.40, psychological domain 78.99, social domain 82.70, and environmental domain 74.75. Conclusion In a developing country such as Pakistan, with most of the patients belonging to lower or middle socioeconomic groups, we believe that the patient’s own sense of QoL is overshadowed by the mere exuberance of being given a second chance at life which was portrayed by the discrepancies in the perceived vs actual QoL graph. One common recurring theme that was noticed whilst interviewing the patients was that the difficulties they might have faced post-transplant paled in comparison to how grateful they were to live another day. A positive trend was noticed between the time since transplant and the QoL score which could be attributed to various factors such as the use of aggressive immunosuppressants, fear of injury, fear of transplant rejection, etc. in the first-year post-transplant. Demographic variables such as income, age, location, etc. did not affect the scores of these patients on a great scale. The present study aims to guide clinicians in the improvement of long-term outcomes of renal transplantation in Pakistan.
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spelling pubmed-98839802023-01-30 Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi Mallick, Naafiah K Hassan, Amna Bhatti, Rai Salaar Sultan Rafique, Daneyal Jaffery, Ailiya R Sharif, Imtenan Zameer, Noor U Mustafa, Hamayun Cureus Transplantation Objectives The objective is to assess the overall quality of life (QoL) in patients who had undergone renal transplant within the last three years and correlate this index with various demographic variables such as age, gender, marital status, and education level and to correlate the QoL score calculated vs. the health status perceived by the patients themselves Materials and methods This was an analytical cross-sectional study, carried out over a period of five months. A total of 123 patients were targeted among which data from 79 patients were gathered including all the patients that underwent kidney transplantation in the past three years at a renal transplant center in CMH, Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Non- Probability convenience sampling was used, and data were collected using the WHOQOL-BREF tool that contained 25 questions targeted to four domains (physical, psychological, social, and environmental). The Questionnaire was administered over the phone with proper consent taken beforehand. Data were analyzed using Excel and SPSS version 23. Results A total of 79 patients were administered the questionnaire with the mean age of our study population being 35±11 years out of which 84.5% were male and 15.5% were female. Patients received the kidney from relative donors (98.4%) with the highest percentage being sister donors (30.9%). The majority of patients reported from Punjab (54.4%), with the rest from far-flung rural areas. An estimated 62.5% of the patients presented with other systemic/psychological disorders such as DM+, IHD, HTN, Hepatitis C, depression, etc. The mean global score of these patients was 79.21 which can be broken down into four domains, physical domain 80.40, psychological domain 78.99, social domain 82.70, and environmental domain 74.75. Conclusion In a developing country such as Pakistan, with most of the patients belonging to lower or middle socioeconomic groups, we believe that the patient’s own sense of QoL is overshadowed by the mere exuberance of being given a second chance at life which was portrayed by the discrepancies in the perceived vs actual QoL graph. One common recurring theme that was noticed whilst interviewing the patients was that the difficulties they might have faced post-transplant paled in comparison to how grateful they were to live another day. A positive trend was noticed between the time since transplant and the QoL score which could be attributed to various factors such as the use of aggressive immunosuppressants, fear of injury, fear of transplant rejection, etc. in the first-year post-transplant. Demographic variables such as income, age, location, etc. did not affect the scores of these patients on a great scale. The present study aims to guide clinicians in the improvement of long-term outcomes of renal transplantation in Pakistan. Cureus 2022-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9883980/ /pubmed/36721569 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.33083 Text en Copyright © 2022, Mallick et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Transplantation
Mallick, Naafiah K
Hassan, Amna
Bhatti, Rai Salaar Sultan
Rafique, Daneyal
Jaffery, Ailiya R
Sharif, Imtenan
Zameer, Noor U
Mustafa, Hamayun
Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi
title Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi
title_full Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi
title_fullStr Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi
title_full_unstemmed Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi
title_short Quality of Life of Post-renal Transplant Patients in Rawalpindi
title_sort quality of life of post-renal transplant patients in rawalpindi
topic Transplantation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9883980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36721569
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.33083
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